ALL DATA DEPICTED IN THIS DASHBOARD ARE ENTIRELY FICTITIOUS. ANY SIMILARITY TO ACTUAL DATA IS PURELY COINCIDENTAL. Figure descriptions are intended to capture themes that should be included but may not reflect presented data.

The number of under-5 deaths per 1,000 live births…

RHCC1 - Under-5 Mortality per 1,000 Live Births

The proportion of malaria cases managed in the community increased during RHCC in all countries. Pneumonia care shifted to iCCM in Mozambique and DRC, while diarrhoea care was increasingly provided in the community in Nigeria only. A higher proportion of malaria and diarrhea cases were treated in the community, compared to pneumonia cases, across all countries.

RHCC2 - % of Malaria Cases Managed in the Community

RHCC2 - % of Pneumonia Cases Managed in the Community

RHCC2 - % of Diarrhoea Cases Managed in the Community

The cumulative number of CHWs who were trained to provide iCCM and the number of CHWs equipped according to the national guidelines approached RHCC targets in all countries.

RHCC3 - # of CHWS Trained in iCCM

RHCC4 - # of CHWs Equipped According to National Guidelines

The total number of CHWs deployed to provide iCCM clinical services reached 800% in DRC, 2310% in Mozambique, 200% in Nigeria, and 1980% in Zambia. The number deployed approached RHCC targets and surpassed national CHW density targets in all but X. Similarly, the number of clinical CHW supervisors trained met RHCC target values.

RHCC5 - # of Clinical CHWs Trained and Deployed for iCCM per 1,000 Children Under Five in RHCC Areas

RHCC5 - # of Clinical CHWs Trained and Deployed for iCCM

RHCC6 - # of Clinical CHW Supervisors Trained

Clinical CHW supervision remained strong throughout RHCC, with CHWs receiving a supervisory contact, on average, every X months. The percentage of CHWs who correctly counted the respiratory rate to diagnose an acute respiratory infection reached DRC, 85% in DRC, NGA, 70% in Mozambique, MOZ, 65% in Nigeria, and ZMB, 95% in Zambia, demonstrating the efficacy of trainings for proper management of suspected pneumonia.

RHCC7 - % of CHWs Who Received At Least One Supervisory Contact in the Prior Month

RHCC8 - % of CHWs Who Correctly Count Respiratory Rate to Diagnose ARI

The percentage of sick cases that were recommended for referral increased/decreased over time, coinciding with more frequent supervisory contacts and/or trainings, seasonality, and/or disruptions to commodities. The proportion of referred children who were received the health facility reached X%, demonstrating the strength of or gaps in the referral process.

RHCC9 - % of Sick Child Cases Recommended for Referral by CHW

RHCC9.1 - % of Sick Children Referred by CHWs Who are Received at Referral Facility

The percentage of CHWs trained in iCCM who continued to provide iCCM services one year after the initial training was 55% in DRC, 70% in Mozambique, 77% in Nigeria, and 85% in Zambia, reflecting successful retention of CHWs in all but DRC, where attrition was attributed to X.

RHCC10 - % of CHWs Trained in iCCM Who Are Providing iCCM 1 Year After Initial Training

RHCC11 - % of iCCM Sites/Outreach Posts with No Stock-outs of Key Malaria Medicines and Diagnostics in the Past Month

RHCC11 - % of iCCM Sites/Outreach Posts with No Stock-outs of Key Pneumonia Medicines and Diagnostics in the Past Month

RHCC11 - % of iCCM Sites/Outreach Posts with No Stock-outs of Key Diarrhoea Medicines and Diagnostics in the Past Month

RHCC12 - % of CHWs Who Had No Stock-outs of Malaria Commodities During the Reporting Period

RHCC12 - % of CHWs Who Had No Stock-outs of Pneumonia Commodities During the Reporting Period

RHCC12 - % of CHWs Who Had No Stock-outs of Diarrhoea Commodities During the Reporting Period

RHCC13 - % of Reports Submitted on Time

RHCC14 - % of Accurate Reports Submitted

RHCC15 - % of Complete Reports Submitted

Caregivers of children under-5 were surveyed in the community at baseline and endline to ascertain their knowledge of iCCM services, the location of their CHW, and warning signs of childhood illnesses that necessitated immediate medical attention. Caregiver knowledge increased from baseline to endline for all three KPI. Unlike in DRC, Mozambique, and Nigeria, caregivers who were surveyed in Zambia were surveyed at health facilities, thus may have reflected individuals who were less likely to rely on iCCM, who required facility-level intervention, or who were generally more likely to seek care for sick children.

RHCC16 - % of Caregivers Aware of iCCM Services

RHCC17 - % of Caregivers Who Know the Location of Their CHW

RHCC18 - % of Caregivers Who Know Two or More Signs of Childhood Illness That Require Immediate Assessment and, if Appropriate, Treatment

KPI Description Disaggregation
RHCC1 Under-five mortality rate in RHCC project areas
RHCC2 % of cases managed at community level
RHCC3 # of CHWs trained
RHCC4 # of trained CHWs equipped according to national guidelines
RHCC5 # of CHWs trained and deployed for iCCM per 1,000 children under-five in RHCC areas
RHCC6 # of CHW supervisors trained
RHCC7 % of CHWs who received at least one supervisory contact in the prior month (where registers were reviewed)
RHCC8 % of CHWs who correctly count respiratory rate to diagnose ARI
RHCC9 % of sick child cases recommended for referral by CHW
RHCC9.1 % of sick children referred by CHWs who are received at referral facility
RHCC10 % of CHWs trained in iCCM who are providing iCCM 1 year after initial training
RHCC11 % of iCCM sites/outreach posts with no stock-outs of key iCCM medicines and diagnostics in the past month disease
RHCC12 % of CHWs who had no stock-outs of commodities during the reporting period disease
RHCC13 % of reports submitted on time
RHCC14 % of accurate reports submitted
RHCC15 % of complete reports submitted
RHCC16 % of community members aware of iCCM services
RHCC17 % of community members who know the location of their CHW
RHCC18 % of caregivers who know two or more signs of childhood illness that require immediate assessment and, if appropriate, treatment